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BMJ 2004;329:59 (3 July), doi:10.1136/bmj.329.7456.59-a
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After I started in general practice I worked a one-in-two night rota for 12 years. By the end, I was thoroughly burnt out and had so little empathy left that I could sit through Spencer Tracy's death scene in Captains Courageous without blubbering. I hated being called out of bed and calling me was as pointless as Tantalus's mother shouting, "Come on, son, eat your dinner." My only remaining virtues were sarcasm and lust, my only emotions apathy and self pity, and I was ready to start slaughtering my staffonly I wasn't sure how to hide their still-quivering bodies from the fuzz.
But when the opportunity of joining an out-of-hours cooperative arose, instead of jumping on it like a health insurance company on the occasional perfectly genuine claim, my feelings were curiously equivocal. Would the patients stand for it? Would there be marching in the streets? Or would they just
Liam Farrell, general practitioner
Crossmaglen, County Armagh
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